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From patient to consumer; from apprentice to professional practitioner.

O M Church, S Poirier

    The Nursing Clinics of North America
    |March 1, 1986
    PubMed
    Summary
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    Women in healthcare benefit from industry changes, moving from patient to consumer. True equality requires competence, not gender, to determine healthcare providers and informed compassion.

    Area of Science:

    • Medical industry transformations
    • Healthcare provider dynamics
    • Patient evolution

    Background:

    • Historical limitations on women in healthcare roles due to societal norms and professional hierarchies.
    • The evolution of women's roles from domestic spheres to public professional life.
    • The impact of Victorian-era gender roles on women's professional advancement in medicine.

    Observation:

    • Women faced limitations in healthcare, often confined to supportive roles serving physicians.
    • The women's suffrage movement promised professional equality but faced delayed fulfillment.
    • Resurgent social reforms in civil rights, consumerism, and feminism have renewed expectations for women in healthcare.

    Findings:

    • The historical dependence of nursing on organized medicine hindered its advancement.

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  • Societal expectations and gender-based limitations restricted women's full participation and potential in healthcare.
  • The shift from patient to consumer reflects a move away from paternalism and towards greater autonomy.
  • Implications:

    • Future healthcare solutions should prioritize competence and informed compassion over gender.
    • Achieving true equality in healthcare necessitates dismantling historical barriers and biases.
    • Transformations in the medical industry offer opportunities for enhanced roles and benefits for women as both patients and providers.